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by author Rob Klettke
alive had a lot to live up to following The Fresh Sheet’s successful inaugural year. This year we ventured farther from our West Coast base, as food writer Jason McRobbie visited fresh new faces and places as well as veteran chefs and established restaurants across Canada’s culinary map. We travelled west to Tofino, BC, and east to Ontario’s Niagara Peninsula, with many city and country stops in between. Throughout our travels, we found exciting restaurants whose chefs are rising to the challenge of buying locally but thinking globally. All of the recipes are available online at alive.com. Another 12 months have passed, and in that time, we have continued to explore the exciting seasonality of Canada’s cuisine. We hope that we have encouraged you to visit your local markets for seasonal inspiration for your own home menus. Next year, we will continue our search for innovative, healthy Canadian restaurants and chefs to find a few more culinary superstars to pin on Canada’s culinary map. Habit Chef Greg Armstrong We started this year’s culinary journey at Habit on Vancouver’s Main Street. Using fresh, locally sourced ingredients, Chef Greg Armstrong creates healthy seasonal menus that reflect global influences. At Habit, the goal is to create food that keeps guests “fit enough to keep coming back for more.”
Rocky Mountain Flatbread Co. Chef Ralf Wollmann Looking for a warm place, we next huddled close to the domed pizza ovens at the Rocky Mountain Flatbread Co. in Vancouver, and settled in for some good family fun. When owners Dominic and Suzanne Felden opened their first restaurant in Canmore, Alberta, the goal was to reinvent the North American staple into an affordable, healthy family food. Chef Ralf Wollmann has done just that by working with local farmers and regional suppliers to create organically healthy pizzas, pastas, and desserts.
Jamie Kennedy at the Gardiner Chef Jamie Kennedy In March we visited renowned Chef Jamie Kennedy in his new restaurant at Toronto’s Gardiner Museum. A long-time practitioner of the “think local” school of culinary thought, Chef Kennedy has been shopping his local farms and producers since the late 1980s. Even though his new restaurant is deep inside Toronto, he is still able to “never lose touch with the garden.” Olson Foods and Bakery Chef Anna Olson Knowing TV chef Anna Olson’s opinion that baking is an act of generosity and sharing, we headed to her Port Dalhousie Olson Foods and Bakery. The chef with such a sweet life shared some advice about conscious consumption: “I have never dieted in my life. Moderation is the key.” Chef Olson also believes that conscious consumption means that we source what is best and local.
Bymark Chef Mark McKewan In May we visited Mark McKewan, a chef with a lengthy pedigree. With a cooking show on television, a luxury boutique hotel in the planning phase, and food retail possibilities, Chef McKewan could have his head in the culinary clouds. Instead, he is still quite grounded, focusing his formidable talents on reinterpreting classic dishes using fresh, local ingredients. His goal is to create simply good food.
Treadwell Chef Stephen Treadwell
Rob Klettke, a writer and editor, likes everything about farm-fresh except stepping in it. Source: alive #302, December 2007 |
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